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Biden sues Justice Department for blocking release of audio files from interviews.

Biden sues Justice Department for blocking release of audio files from interviews.


Former president Joe Biden sued on Tuesday to ask a federal judge not to release audio recordings or transcripts of private conversations he had with the ghostwriter who wrote his 2017 autobiogrhy. Subscribe to read the story without ads Justice Department Get access to adfree articles and exclusive content. Biden’s attorney Amy Jeffress writes in Tuesday’s lawsuit in U.S. district court for Washington, D.C., that “the Department has reversed this position” after President Donald Trump’s second term. Amy Jeffress, Biden’s attorney, writes that during the second term of President Donald Trump, the Department reversed its position. Jeffress writes: “President Biden recounted in his conversations with Zwonitzer – and in his memoir – the year that began in Thanksgiving 2014” The year 2014 was one of the most important in President Biden’s life, and also the most painful. Jeffress stated that every American has the right of privacy for the conversations held in one’s own home, whether a current or former Vice-President. The Heritage Foundation wanted all the records on which Robert Hur, the then-special prosecutor who wrote the 2023 report about Biden handling classified documents, relied. It described him as being “painfully slower” with Biden having trouble remembering events and struggling at times to read or relay his own journal entries. Hur declined to charge Biden criminally. Zwonitzer, the Justice Department, and Zwonitzer have not responded to our requests for comment. Trump called Biden a “crooked politician” in his response to the lawsuit.

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All evacuation orders lifted as explosion in California chemical tank avoided

All evacuation orders lifted as explosion in California chemical tank avoided


Days after the threat of an explosion at a tank of chemicals sparked fears of environmental disaster, 16,000 residents from a Southern California town were allowed to go home on Tuesday. Subscribe to read the story without ads

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A chemical implosion has killed at least one in Washington

A chemical implosion has killed at least one in Washington


An implosion occurred at a Washington manufacturing company in the southwest on Tuesday. Subscribe to read the story without ads

Eli Bernal stated that his father Gilbert Bernal was killed in the plant where they both worked. Jim John, the pastor of the family, stated that Eli Bernal was at the Longview facility’s security gate during the explosion. John said that Eli was accompanying all ambulances into the facility through the security gate while his father was inside. The statement said that the patients were treated at hospitals in Longview, Vancouver and surrounding areas. PeaceHealth St. John Medical Center received nine victims after the explosion, including one who died and six others in fair condition.

There are still some individuals that have not been located as crews continue their accountability and recovery efforts. Mike Gorsuch said that a firefighter was also injured in the incident and has been treated at the Longview Hospital. Officials have advised the public to avoid the plant. They also said that the immediate danger to the community is not present. The Washington representative of the Association of Washington Pulp and Per Workers said that he was in touch with workers’ family members but refused to comment. Cowlitz County fire chief Scott Goldstein told reporters that the white liquor, used in the permaking process, contained sodium hydroxide. sodium sulfide, and disodium carboxide.

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NASA announces plans to launch three unmanned moon missions this year as a first step to building a lunar base. Subscribe to this story to get unlimited access to exclusive content and ad free articles. These missions, which are all robotic flights, will allow NASA to gather scientific data at the South Pole of the moon, test new technologies, and prepare its astronauts for their return to the surface. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman told a press briefing on Tuesday that the agency would not be rushing to build a glass dome moonbase. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman spoke on May 19, 2010 in Washington. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images Isaacman stated that the first mission is not scheduled to launch before this fall. Blue Origin of Jeff Bezos will be playing a significant role in this first mission. NASA has awarded Blue Origin a contract for the lunar lander to be used to transport two science and tech payloads. All three flights will be part of NASA’s long-term goal to establish a moon base. This initial phase will last until 2029. NASA will then build semi-permanent structures to allow early human habitation of the moon during the second phase from 2029-2032. The agency stated that it will achieve a sustained presence in the lunar surface by the third phase starting in 2032. Carlos Garcia Galan, NASA MoonBase’s program manager, stated Tuesday that the MoonBase base could cover hundreds of square kilometers. NASA officials have said that they envision regular crew rotations on and off the Moon, along with continuous activity at the surface. The moon base plans of the agency are designed to be implemented in conjunction with its Artemis Return-to-the Moon program. NASA’s Artemis II mission, which took four astronauts around the Earth and moon in a 10-day voyage last month, was the first mission to reach the moon since more than 50 year. NASA will launch its Artemis III mission, which is scheduled to take place in 2027, to demonstrate technology in low-Earth space with either one or both lunar landers being developed by Blue Origin and SpaceX. NASA will launch Artemis IV in 2028 if the first mission is successful. This mission will land astronauts on moon.

NASA announces plans to launch three unmanned moon missions this year as a first step to building a lunar base. Subscribe to this story to get unlimited access to exclusive content and ad free articles. These missions, which are all robotic flights, will allow NASA to gather scientific data at the South Pole of the moon, test new technologies, and prepare its astronauts for their return to the surface. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman told a press briefing on Tuesday that the agency would not be rushing to build a glass dome moonbase. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman spoke on May 19, 2010 in Washington. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images Isaacman stated that the first mission is not scheduled to launch before this fall. Blue Origin of Jeff Bezos will be playing a significant role in this first mission. NASA has awarded Blue Origin a contract for the lunar lander to be used to transport two science and tech payloads. All three flights will be part of NASA’s long-term goal to establish a moon base. This initial phase will last until 2029. NASA will then build semi-permanent structures to allow early human habitation of the moon during the second phase from 2029-2032. The agency stated that it will achieve a sustained presence in the lunar surface by the third phase starting in 2032. Carlos Garcia Galan, NASA MoonBase’s program manager, stated Tuesday that the MoonBase base could cover hundreds of square kilometers. NASA officials have said that they envision regular crew rotations on and off the Moon, along with continuous activity at the surface. The moon base plans of the agency are designed to be implemented in conjunction with its Artemis Return-to-the Moon program. NASA’s Artemis II mission, which took four astronauts around the Earth and moon in a 10-day voyage last month, was the first mission to reach the moon since more than 50 year. NASA will launch its Artemis III mission, which is scheduled to take place in 2027, to demonstrate technology in low-Earth space with either one or both lunar landers being developed by Blue Origin and SpaceX. NASA will launch Artemis IV in 2028 if the first mission is successful. This mission will land astronauts on moon.


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Tech titans mostly silent following Pope Leo XIV’s

Tech titans mostly silent following Pope Leo XIV’s


warning about AI risks. Subscribe to this story to enjoy it ad free warning about the dangers of artificial intelligence Receive unlimited access to exclusive articles and ad free content. Leo’s 42,300-word-long encyclical was published Monday. In it, he called for stricter regulation of private firms that power the AI boom. Also, he urged for better protections to be given to workers who face economic disruption as well as measures for protecting people from fake AI generated information. He also criticised “the ease with which autonomous weon systems can be deployed.” We can embrace technology that relieves suffering and opens up new opportunities, but we must not forget the very essence that makes us human, which is the cacity to love and relate. That’s what the pontiff wrote about in Magnifica Humanitas, or Magnificent Humanity. Silicon Valley’s highest-profile AI executives – including Sam Altman Elon Musk Mark Zuckerberg – did not publicly express their opinion on Leo’s encyclical. It was his first since being elected as the head of Catholic Church. Amazon, Anthropic and Google did not respond to comments Tuesday. Neither did Microsoft, Nvidia or OpenAI. Anthropic has been advocating more robust safeguards over the technology since years. One of the company’s most important figures, Christopher Olah, also peared with Leo during the presentation of the encyclical and welcomed Leo’s words. Christopher Olah was a cofounder at the firm and peared alongside Leo for the presentation. He made remarks to welcome “moral voices”, which are trying to guide their industry. Olah told

, referring George Orwell’s allegory novel. Sacks said in Latin and English: “Who will guard these guardians?” Lazzarin said that the encyclical felt defensive. “It protects our dignity by saying that intelligence wasn’t the point. Without really explaining what this means, or what it means to us when intelligence becomes no longer unique to human beings.” In March, the majority of voters (57%) said they thought the risks outweighed the benefits of AI, while 34% disagreed.

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U.S. military strikes Iran again

U.S. military strikes Iran again


Iran has accused the United States of a “clear violation” of the ceasefire after it launched defensive strikes which threatened to disrupt intensifying negotiations to end war. Subscribe to read the story adfree

that an agreement could be finalized within “a few days” and that negotiators are only at “disagreements about a word or a sentence.” Tehran’s foreign minister said American forces violated the ceasefire over the past 48-hours in the Hormuz Region. The Iranian Foreign Ministry said that the American regime was responsible for the consequences of these hostile acts. It warned that it would not hesitate to defend the dignity of Iran’s people and “will leave no act of aggression without a response.” The temporary ceasefire that went into effect on ril 8 was not altered. “U.S. Central Command is continuing to defend its forces, while exercising restraint in the ongoing ceasefire”, said Navy Ct. Tim Hawkins, who announced the strikes on Monday evening, said that they were carried out. Tehran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard has pledged to “respond decisively” to any violation of ceasefire. It claims to have shot down a U.S. MQ-9 drone, and fired at a second U.S. drone, and F35 fighter jet forcing them to reverse, according to an official statement released by the Fars news agency. Pentagon has not responded to these allegations. U.S. military said late Monday it had launched self-defense strikes This is not the first time the U.S. has carried out a strike during the ceasefire. The new attacks came as both sides increased their talks on ending the war which began when U.S. and Israeli forces attacked Iran on February 28. Iran had said that an agreement wasn’t imminent on Monday after Trump raised expectations and then decreased them that near the Strait of Hormuz. The presence of Tehran’s top negotiators at the Qatar conference was another indication that progress may be being made toward an agreement to end this three-month conflict. Iranian news agencies stated that the team’s main demand was to unfreeze the assets of Qatar worth billions. A diplomat who was familiar with the visit told NBC News that Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Parliament Speaker of Qatar, left Qatar Tuesday morning after staying over night to continue discussions. Qatar, which was intensifying its mediation efforts to reach a settlement, brought him and other Iranian officials into Qatar on Monday. A “memorandum of agreement” that is signed could lead to the end of this war and the opening of the Strait of Hormuz. A senior Trump administration official said that the framework would give both parties 60 days to negotiate a complete peace deal.

Iran has effectively shut down the vital trade route, and the U.S. Military has blockedaded Iranian ports. This has slowed maritime traffic and disrupted global supplies of food and energy. Trump introduced a new wrinkle to the talks Monday, linking an Iran agreement with the Marco Rubio told reporters in India that Israel and some of their Arab neighbors have been negotiating. He urged a number nations, including Qatar and Saudi Arabia to sign the agreement. The senior Arab official of a country Trump referred to rejected the idea of a deal. She told NBC News it was more important to end the war against Iran and reopen Hormuz before discussing a deal with Israel. The official who did not want to be identified said, “We have to resolve this first, and then we can move on to other issues.”

Trump demanded Monday a solution to the issue regarding enriched Uranium inside Iran. This is the key sticking point of the ongoing negotiations. The president repeatedly has called for Iran to send its current stockpile of enriched uranium to the U.S., or to another location.

Trump stated on social media that material would be “either immediately handed over to the United States for destruction or, preferably in coordination and conjunction with the Islamic Republic of Iran destroyed in place, or at another acceptable location with the Atomic Energy Commission or its equivalent being witnesses to this process and the event.” Tehran insists it does not have any plans to develop a nuclear weon, and maintains its right to an nuclear program. Mojtaba Khanei, Iran’s Supreme Leader who has not been seen in public for the past two years since he succeeded his father, said on Tuesday that America would no longer enjoy a safe place in the Middle East. In a social media posting, Khamenei, believed to have been injured by U.S. and Israeli strikes, stated that “the ticker of time won’t go back” and that the U.S. would no longer have any safe haven in the Middle east.

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